Chapter 3.1 - Articles

Chapter 3.1 - Articles

Cover Page The handle http://hdl.handle.net/1887/62332 holds various files of this Leiden University dissertation Author: Jansen, Justin J.F.J. Title: The ornithology of the Baudin expedition (1800-1804) Date: 2018-05-22 58 Chapter 3.1 - Articles Chapter 3.1 The Baudin Expedition to Tenerife, St. Thomas, St. Croix and Puerto Rico in 1796-98 Justin J.F.J. Jansen and Jérôme Fuchs Accepted version for: Journal of Caribbean Ornithology 2018 (31). Abstract: The results of archival and collection research into the expedition led by Nicolas Baudin in 1796-1798 to Tenerife, St. Thomas, St. Croix and Puerto Rico are here- in presented. The expedition brought home at least 296 specimens and was the first to collect in St. Thomas, St. Croix and Puerto Rico. Of these, 142+ specimens still survive, the largest single-voyage collection from pre-1800 still available. Accounts of these spec- imens and those known to have vanished are presented here for the first time, adding to our knowledge of early Caribbean ornithology. The arguments of David K. Wetherbee (1985, 1986) that thefts by the Baudin expedition took place during a foray into Hispan- iola are all shown to be suspect. Molecular work identified a Common Barn-owl Tyto alba ssp supposedly collected in Puerto Rico, where no Common Barn-owls now occur, as belonging to a clade of owls found in the Netherlands Antilles and Northern and Central America. Keywords: Baudin, Virgin Island, Puerto Rico, Tenerife, expedition, Common Barn-owl INTRODUCTION One of the first scientific expeditions to the Caribbean was captained in 1796-1798 by Nico- las-Thomas Baudin (1754-1803), during which the Danish West Indies (now US Virgin Islands) and Puerto Rico were explored. Expeditions before 1800 that brought large numbers of speci- mens home were not rare (Jansen 2016b), but from only a few do fair numbers survive. To date only 1500-3000 specimens collected before 1800 are still known to exist (Steinheimer 2005). The purpose of this research is to present the reader with data gathered from the Bau- din expedition and to discuss the publications by Wetherbee (1985, 1986). In these papers Wetherbee raised a number of issues concerning, for example: the supposed collectors on the Baudin expedition (e.g. René Maugé, Alejandro Advenier, Antoine Gonzales and J. Louis Hog- ard), political espionage, the character of Baudin, Baudin selling all the specimens gathered on the voyage and gaining a huge profit, Baudin stealing specimens from Jamaica, Haiti and Trinidad (from the expedition led by Franz Joseph Märter (1784-1788)) and the existence of papers made by Maugé and subsequent destruction of these papers as cover-up for the theft. The Baudin expedition is especially known for its collection of the type of the now extinct Hispaniolan Parakeet Psittacara chloropterus maugei on Puerto Rico (Olson 2015). In addition, some of the collected birds on the expedition were the basis for several other type descrip- tions (see for example: Voisin and Voisin 2010 (p. 15); 2011 (pp. 16 & 22); 2016 (p. 57)). Itinerary of the Baudin Expedition On 30 September 1796, Baudin left La Havre, France, on the 350-ton corvette Belle Angelique with four naturalists on board: René Maugé (1757-1802), Anselme Riedlé (1775-1801), An- dré-Pierre Ledru (1761-1825) and Stanislaus Levillain (x-1801). Baudin’s goal was to recover Chapter 3.1 - Articles 59 natural history specimens (chiefly living plants and trees, but also birds) collected in China, Malaysia, South Africa and the West Indies (particularly Trinidad) that he had been left be- hind on his previous voyage on the Jardinière in 1795. The ship Belle Angelique headed for the Canary Islands, where she docked on 6 November at Puerto de la Cruz on Tenerife and was condemned here as unseaworthy. On 15 March 1797, after a prolonged stay of four months, Baudin left Tenerife for Trinidad with a reduced crew on the American brig The Fanny, arriv- ing on Trinidad on 10 April. He only remained there until 21 April, however, as Trinidad had fallen into the hands of the English and Baudin was not allowed to stay any longer, nor were his specimens from the Jardinière given back. Determined to make the expedition a success, Baudin decided to collect on other Caribbean islands, heading first to St. Thomas and St. Croix, where he remained from 30 April – 17 July 1797. Due to a lack of space for his growing collections, Baudin replaced The Fanny with The Triumph at St. Croix and renamed this ship La Belle Angélique. He continued to Puerto Rico, where specimens were collected on the north and east of the island from 16 July 1797 to 13 April 1798. Subsequently Baudin returned to France, docking at Fécamp, Normandy, on 7 June 1798. After collection, the birds were preserved as skins and transported back to France. On arriv- al in France, the prime bird collector, René Maugé, worked on the collections. In collaboration with Louis Dufresne, senior taxidermist at the Muséum national d’histoire naturelle (MNHN), birds were mounted, as shown by Dufresne’s handwriting on the pedestal undersides. The Common Barn-owl Tyto alba ssp collected on the expedition was not recorded until 2016 in Puerto Rico. So, either the Baudin expedition’s Barn-owl (MNHN-ZO-2014-457) from there represents the first and sole earlier record or else it was collected elsewhere; therefore, we decided to DNA sample the specimen to try to confirm what taxon was involved. METHODS To establish the number of bird specimens collected during the 1796-1798 Baudin expedition that still survive, JJFJJ explored the various sections in which birds are stored in the MNHN during seven visits between 2011 and 2017. Additional research was carried out in other col- lections where specimens exist following exchanges or donations from MNHN, including Nat- uralis Biodiversity Center, Leiden, the Netherlands (hereafter Naturalis), Naturhistorisches Museum Wien, Austria (NMW) and National Museums Scotland, Edinburgh (NMS). Additional information was received from Musée George-Sand et de la Vallée noire, de la Châtre (MLC) Muséum-Aquarium de Nancy, Nancy, France and Musée vert - Muséum d’histoire naturelle au Mans, France (MHNLM). Relevant literature was also researched. For the specimens that are now lost, it has been presumed that the identification was correct in the acquisition books (MNHN laboratory, Ms ZMO-GalOis 1-5), which were started in roughly 1854. For DNA sampling a tissue sample from one of the toe pads was collected from the Com- mon Barn-owl brought back on the expedition for genetic analysis (executed at 9 February 2016). We extracted DNA using the Qiagen kit, following the manufacturer’s protocol but doubled quantities and added DTT to facilitate the digestion of the tissue. A short fragment of the Cytochrome b was amplified and sequenced using primers Tyto-cytb470L: 5’ TCCCAT- TYCACCCATACTTCTC and Tyto-cytb580H: 5’ GGTGAGTGGGTTTGCTGGTG 3’ and compared to existing Cytochrome b sequences from Tyto species and subspecies (Wink et al. 2009, Aliabadi- an et al. 2016); the fragment retained for the analyses was 620 bp long and corresponds to the positions 13830 to 14449 of the nearly complete Tyto alba mitochondrial genome (EU410491; Pratt et al. 2009). Gene tree reconstruction of the unique haplotypes was performed using Bayesian inference (BI), as implemented in MrBayes 3.2 (Ronquist et al. 2012). We used the nst=mixed and rates=invgamma options so that model uncertainty could be considered during the phylogenetic reconstruction. Four Metropolis-coupled MCMC chains (one cold and three heated) were run for 10*106 iterations with trees sampled every 103 iterations. RESULTS Number of collected specimens According to Wetherbee (1985: 171, 1986: 51-54), François Marie Daudin, who put Baudin’s 60 Chapter 3.1 - Articles Fig. 3-001 | PUERTO DE LA CRUZ, Tenerife, 4 November 2016 (Justin JFJ Jansen). The ship was docked here in 1796-1797. KX440440 KX440439 KX440444 KX440441 KX440438 KX440434 KX440437 EU349004 T. a. bargei KX440436 T. a. hellmayri T. a. pratincola KX440443 T. a. tuidara KX440446 (New World) furcata AJ004073 clade 1.0 MNHN-ZO-2014-457 EU349006 EU349000 EU349002 KX440458 KX440456 KX440457 KX440448 KX440450 AJ004072 T. a. erlangeri, T. a. guttata alba AJ004071 T. affinis clade EU349003 1.0 (Eurasia, Africa) AJ004070 EU348998 EU348997 EU410491 KX440460 T. a. delicatula, T. a. javanica javanica EU348996 1.0 clade EU167029 (Indonesia, Australia) EU349001 Tyto novaehollandiae calabyi KC492085 Tyto sororcula cayelii KC492089 Tyto novaehollandiae EU349009 Tyto sororcula sororcula KC492087 Tyto manusi KC492084 Tyto castanops EU349007 0.98 Tyto almae KC492090 Tyto longimembris EU349008 0.1 Fig. 3-002 | The majority rule (50%) consensus trees resulting from the Bayesian analyses of the Cyto- chrome b sequences from Tyto species. Numbers next to leaves represent Genbank accession numbers. Numbers close to nodes refer to posterior probabilities greater than 0.95. Chapter 3.1 - Articles 61 birds on display in the Paris Museum soon after the expedition’s return, saw 700 specimens and listed 94 species. However, Daudin also quoted a notice of receipt of specimens from the expedition signed by Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck of 450 specimens of birds (Wetherbee 1986: 29). According to another source, 296 birds from the expedition arrived at the MNHN on 2 March 1800 (Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire 1809, Jansen 2015a: 84). The actual number is therefore unknown due to the discrepancies in numbers and sources. By 1809 only 210 were still pres- ent (Jansen 2015a: 84). No original inventory could be found in the Laboratory or Library of the MNHN or in the Archives Nationales at Pierrefit-sur-Seine. When Baudin subsequently visited Tenerife in 1800, he accessed a crate with birds he had left behind in 1797.

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